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Alanecuatro

Alanecuatro Spain Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
48.8%- 45.5%- 5.7%
Bullet 1580
846W 751L 94D
Blitz 1558
2520W 2445L 299D
Rapid 1956
345W 264L 38D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary of the recent games

You played aggressively in your most recent rapid losses — you’re not afraid to sacrifice for the initiative (nice eye for tactical shots). A couple of games show the same pattern: an enterprising middlegame idea followed by a loss of momentum and then a quick shift to a worse position. Example: your game vs hurghadalovers reached a sharp middlegame after you sacrificed on f7 to pry open the king — great spirit, but the attack didn’t convert and Black consolidated. Here’s the critical position from that game so you can replay the sequence and study the turning point:

Interactive position (tap to open):

What you’re doing well

  • You show strong tactical vision and a willingness to open lines (the f7 sacrifice is a textbook attacking idea — you spot chances).
  • Your opening repertoire produces imbalanced, fighting positions (your openings win rates in the Amar Gambit, Barnes/Walkerling and Australian Defense are excellent — you know how to create practical chances).
  • You convert to direct threats quickly — creating mating or win-in-material tactics when the opponent slips.

Main areas to improve

Focus on these recurring issues that cost you games:

  • Follow-through after a sacrifice: Sacrificing to open a king is great, but you must force the win. After your bishop took on f7 and the king captured, Black was able to blunt the attack with a pawn and knight. Work on sequencing — after a sacrifice ask: which piece keeps pressure on the enemy king, which square can the defender use to consolidate, and do I have a forced line that wins material or mate?
  • Piece coordination: After the tactical shot, your pieces sometimes become uncoordinated (queen/rooks not joined, knights misplaced). Before launching a sacrifice, ensure other pieces can join the attack quickly.
  • Time management in rapid: You often drop to very low time later in the game. Maintain a reserve (aim for 2–3 minutes at move 20 in 10|0 games). Panic time leads to mistakes and missed defensive resources.
  • Defensive technique and consolidation: When the opponent survives the initial storm your positions can collapse. Practice simple defensive patterns and how to exchange into favorable endgames when the attack fizzles.

Concrete drills & study plan (next 4 weeks)

  • Daily tactics: 12–18 puzzles a day focusing on sacrifices, discovered attacks and mating nets. Prioritize puzzles where you must calculate 3–5 moves ahead.
  • One focused opening session (15–20 minutes) three times a week: review the lines where you struggle to convert (for example, look at typical Black responses to your gambit/sac ideas and the clean defensive plans they use). For the French-like game above, review basic defenses to king-side sacrificial play in the French Defense Normal Variation.
  • One endgame/defense micro-session per week: practice basic king-and-pawn vs king, rook endgames and one defensive study — this builds confidence when the attack doesn’t work.
  • Weekly game review: pick one rapid loss and annotate the turning point. Ask: “Where did my plan shift from good to risky?” and “What defensive resource did my opponent use?”
  • Time control practice: play a few rapid games with a modest increment (e.g. 10|5 or 5|3) so you learn to keep a minute-plus reserve at critical moments.

Practical tips for similar positions

  • After you open the opponent’s king file with a sac, don’t chase immediate checks only — ask whether you can cut off escape squares and bring another piece to a key square (rook lift, knight outpost, or queen battery).
  • If Black returns material to neutralize your initiative, switch to a concrete plan: either liquidate into a winning endgame or create a new imbalance (passed pawn, piece activity).
  • Before offering a sacrifice ask: “If I’m wrong, can I survive?” If the answer is no, prefer a quieter continuation or a smaller material investment.

Suggested next steps

  • Review the game vs hurghadalovers move-by-move (use the interactive position above). Mark the exact move where your attack loses steam and find one concrete alternative line to practice.
  • Work three weeks on tactics + one week on conversion/defense — repeat the cycle. Small, consistent sessions beat occasional long ones.
  • Keep a short notes file for recurring mistakes (e.g., “after Bxf7 check for knight blocks on e5”); review it before each session.

Motivation & closing

You have a fighting style and strong opening results in many lines — that’s a huge advantage. With focused work on converting attacks, defensive technique, and a little time-management polishing, you should see your rapid results bounce back quickly. If you want, tell me which game you want a deeper move-by-move annotation of (or paste the PGN) and I’ll walk through concrete alternatives.


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